You finish a two hour deep work session, look at your time tracker, and realize you forgot to start it. Again.
You finish a two hour deep work session, look at your time tracker, and realize you forgot to start it. Again.
You try to reconstruct what you did from memory. Was it two hours? Maybe closer to an hour and a half? You round down because you're not sure. Another 30 minutes of billable work vanishes.
If this sounds familiar, you're not alone. Forgetting to track time is the single most common problem with time tracking, and it has nothing to do with discipline. It's a design problem.
Time tracking fails when it requires you to interrupt your workflow. Think about what happens when you sit down to work:
You open Notion (or your project management tool) and look at your tasks. You pick the one you're going to work on. You start working.
Notice what didn't happen? You didn't open a separate time tracking app, search for the right project, find the right task, and click start. Because that's three to four extra steps that break your focus before you've even started.
The mental cost of those extra steps is small but real. And over the course of a day, "I'll start the timer in a second" turns into "I'll log it later" turns into "I'll estimate it on Friday."
Telling yourself you'll be more disciplined about tracking doesn't work. We know this because every team that relies on willpower based time tracking has the same compliance problem.
The fix is reducing the gap between "deciding what to work on" and "the timer is running." Ideally to zero.
Strategy 1: Put the timer where you make work decisions.
If you decide what to work on in Notion, that's where the timer should be. Not in a separate tab. Not in a browser extension you forget to click. Right next to the task you just picked.
Strategy 2: Make it one click.
Every additional click is a chance to forget. The ideal workflow is: see your task, click one button, timer starts.
Strategy 3: Automate project and task matching.
A lot of forgetting happens not because people skip the timer entirely, but because finding the right project in the time tracker takes too long. They click start on the wrong project, get frustrated, and give up. If the timer already knows which project and task you're working on, this friction disappears.
Try TimeKnot free
Connect your Notion workspace and start tracking time in minutes.
Get started free →Strategy 4: Keep the timer visible.
A running timer in the corner of your screen or in your browser tab title serves as a constant reminder. When you switch tasks, you see the old timer still running and remember to stop and start a new one.
TimeKnot was designed specifically to eliminate the gap between task selection and time tracking.
Your Notion tasks show up in TimeKnot. You click play on a task. The timer starts in both TimeKnot and Clockify. A timer widget stays visible in the corner showing what you're tracking and for how long. The browser tab title updates with the running time.
When you finish, you click stop. The time is logged. You pick your next task and click play again.
There's no searching for projects. No switching tools. No "I'll log it later." The timer is literally attached to the task you're working on.
If you manage a team and struggle with time tracking compliance, the answer isn't more reminders or stricter policies. It's making tracking so easy that it's harder to skip than to do.
When each team member opens TimeKnot and sees only their assigned tasks with a play button next to each one, the path of least resistance is to click play. That's the entire workflow.
When you stop forgetting to track time, several things change:
Your billable hours go up (because you're capturing time you used to lose). Your project estimates get more accurate (because you have real data). Your end of week time logging stress disappears (because it's already done). Your reports actually reflect reality (because the data wasn't entered from memory on Friday).
All of this comes from solving one simple problem: making the timer impossible to forget because it's built into the same place you manage your work.